SELL-OUT AT THE SUMMIT: CLINTON COMPROMISES U.S., ALLIED SECURITY WITH CONCESSIONS IN MOSCOW

(Washington, D.C.): As predicted (1),
President Clinton used his just-completed summit with Boris
Yeltsin for a deplorable purpose — namely, to affirm his
commitment to perpetuate the American people’s vulnerability to
ballistic missile attack. What was surprising though was the
extent to which Mr. Clinton went even farther than expected to circumscribe,
foreclose or otherwise offer the Russians a veto over
U.S.
options to defend American forces and allies overseas.

Taken together, the “basic principles” Messrs.
Clinton and Yeltsin have agreed to will have the effect not only
of endorsing the obsolete and increasingly dangerous 1972
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. They also significantly expand its
scope in ways inimical to vital U.S. interests. In so doing,
President Clinton has thrown down the gauntlet to the
congressional leadership which has repeatedly and strenuously
objected to his diplomatic initiatives in this area.
(2)

Shame, Shame: A Bill of Particulars

The following are the “basic principles” (emphasis
added throughout) that the two presidents have declared would
“serve as a basis for further discussions in order to reach
agreement in the field of demarcation between Anti-Ballistic
Missile (ABM) systems and Theater Missile Defense (TMD)
systems.” (This formulation expressly commits the
United States to continue negotiations to which Senate Majority
Leader Robert Dole, House Speaker Newt Gingrich and virtually the
entire Republican congressional leadership have formally
expressed their opposition.)

  • The United States and Russia are each committed
    to the ABM Treaty, a cornerstone of strategic
    stability.”
    Since the 1972 ABM Treaty
    effectively precludes the United States and its people
    from being defended, this “principle”
    establishes unequivocally President Clinton’s
    determination to leave this Nation vulnerable to missile
    attack — even as he has acquiesced to Russia’s plan
    to ensure that Iran will be able to have nuclear weapons
    with which to exploit that vulnerability
    . (See
    below.)
  • “Both sides must have the option to establish and to
    deploy effective theater missile defense systems. Such
    activity must not lead to violation or circumvention of
    the ABM Treaty.
    ” This “principle”
    affords the Russians the first of several bases upon
    which to object to future U.S. deployments of theater
    missile defenses, systems that have not heretofore been
    legally constrained by the ABM Treaty. It will
    indubitably be cited also as grounds for objecting to
    future cooperation on TMD with allied governments.
  • Theater missile defense systems may be deployed
    by each side which (1) will not pose a realistic
    threat to the strategic nuclear force of the other side

    and (2) will not be tested to give such systems
    that capability.” The term “realistic” was
    reportedly inserted at Russian insistence. The reason?
    The extent to which a threat is “realistic” is
    clearly in the eyes of the threatened. It is predictable
    that Moscow will be claiming that American TMD systems —
    particularly capable ones — are a threat to individual
    Russian missiles, even if they are wholly inadequate
    to pose a “significant” or
    “meaningful” threat against a Russian attack in
    a “force-on-force” scenario
    .
  • Theater missile defense will not be deployed by
    the sides for use against each other.
    ” This
    “principle” appears to introduce a basis for
    the Russians to argue that there should be geographic
    limitations on the deployment of U.S. TMD systems. The
    ABM Treaty imposes no such limitations on non-strategic
    anti-missile weapons.
  • The scale of the deployment — in number and
    geographic scope — of theater missile defense systems by
    either side will be consistent with theater ballistic
    missile programs confronting that side.
    ” This
    “principle” appears to offer the Russians a
    “two-fer”: First, it establishes that there
    should be some relationship between the scale of theater
    missile threats faced by a “side” and the
    number of theater missile defenses that “side”
    may have. And second, it creates a basis for establishing
    numerical as well as geographic limitations on U.S. TMD
    capabilities.
  • According to this logic, since Russia faces a
    potentially enormous danger of attack from shorter-range
    ballistic missiles, it would be entitled to an enormous
    number of TMD systems. Since Russia’s TMD systems (e.g.,
    the SA-12 and S-300) have considerable strategic missile
    defense potential, the Kremlin could proceed with what
    amounts to a nation-wide defense against missiles of
    all ranges
    . On the other hand, since the United
    States itself faces no theater missile threats,
    its TMD capabilities would presumably be limited to
    overseas deployments and possibly just to those numbers
    and regions where U.S. forces are still forward-deployed.

  • “In the spirit of partnership, the Presidents
    undertook to promote reciprocal openness in
    activities of the sides in Theater Missile Defense
    systems and in the exchange of corresponding
    information.”
    Given previous experience,
    openness in sensitive Russian military programs is
    anything but reciprocal, as is evident from continuing
    problems associated with Moscow’s non-compliance with
    various data exchange and verification requirements of
    existing arms control agreements.
  • The Presidents confirmed the interest of the
    sides in the development and fielding of effective theater
    missile defense systems on a cooperative basis.
    The
    sides will make every effort toward the goal of
    broadening bilateral cooperation in the area of defense
    against ballistic missiles. They will consider expanding
    cooperative efforts in theater missile defense technology
    and exercises, study ways of sharing data obtained
    through early warning systems, discuss theater missile
    defense architecture concepts, and seek opportunities for
    joint research and development in theater missile
    defense.”
  • This “principle” appears to mean that
    instead of the “cooperation” contemplated by
    President Reagan between the two sides on a global
    — read, strategic — anti-missile system, there will now
    be only “cooperation” on theater missile
    defenses. This is a substantial departure even from the
    commitment made by President Yeltsin in January 1992 when
    he expressed a desire to participate in a “global
    protective system.” All other things being equal,
    the “cooperation” contemplated by this far more
    narrow statement will mean the transfer of extremely
    sensitive technical information, software and hardware
    that could lead to its irreparable compromise.

Other Aspects of the Summit Appear No Better

Regrettably, Mr. Clinton appears to have performed no better
in other areas he discussed with Mr. Yeltsin and/or addressed in
their communiqué:

  • Nuclear Weapons for Iran: Mr. Clinton claims to
    have secured two concessions concerning Russia’s planned
    transfer of nuclear weapons-related technology to Iran:
    First, Mr. Yeltsin has agreed not to sell Tehran a gas
    centrifuge facility used to enrich uranium for nuclear
    weapons. This is no major concession as even Yeltsin
    admits that it would be a “military” program;
    its transfer would put Russia in clear violation of the
    Non-Proliferation Treaty and in deep trouble with the
    U.S. Congress. There is every reason to believe that
    this item was added for the sole purpose of throwing it
    overboard in order to get President Clinton’s approval of
    the rest of the Iranian deal.
  • Second, the Gore-Chernomyrdin group is supposed to
    “review” the remainder of Russia’s nuclear
    cooperation program with Tehran. The value of this
    cosmetic exercise was made even more insignificant by Mr.
    Clinton’s announcement that the Russia-Iran cooperation
    was “legal” and “consistent with
    international treaties.”
    Worse yet, he agreed to
    pap-filled communiqué language legitimating Russian
    activities by associating the United States with:

    “[The Presidents’ shared] commitments
    to the NPT and to the nuclear suppliers group
    guidelines, and in particular to the principles that
    nuclear transfers should take place only under
    full-scope International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
    safeguards and only when a supplier is satisfied that
    such transfers to any non-nuclear weapon state would
    not contribute to the proliferation of nuclear
    weapons.”

  • Chechnya: First, President Clinton dignified the
    perpetrators of brutal genocide in Chechnya by appearing
    in Moscow for festivities that featured a parade of
    hardware and personnel used in that brutal Stalinesque
    operation. (His decision to absent himself from the
    reviewing stand for the parade poetically captured the
    whole summit’s leitmotif of
    “See-No-Evil.”) Then he agreed to a communiqué
    that reeks of detentist moral equivalence and
    indifference to actual Russian behavior:
  • “Aggressive nationalism, proliferation of
    weapons of mass destruction, unresolved territorial
    disputes and violations in the area of human rights
    present serious threats to stability, peace and
    prosperity. The Presidents agree that the effort
    to deal with these challenges must be based on
    respect for the principles and commitments of the
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe,
    particularly concerning democracy, political
    pluralism, respect for human rights and civil
    liberties,
    free market economies and strict
    respect for sovereignty, territorial integrity and
    self-determination.

  • NATO: Another rout appears to have occurred on the
    alliance-management front. Russian efforts to sabotage
    NATO and prevent its eastward expansion seem to have been
    advanced, among other things, by the adoption of
    communiqué language that appears to commit the United
    States to full Russian membership in an institution
    conceived — and still needed — to deal with a potential
    strategic, military and political threat from Moscow:
  • “[The Presidents] agreed that the central
    element of a lasting peace must be the integration of
    all of Europe into a series of mutually supporting
    institutions and relationships which ensure that
    there will be no return to division or
    confrontation
    . The evolution of European
    structures should be directed toward the overall
    goal of integration
    . President Clinton stressed
    that the process should be transparent, inclusive and
    based on an integral relationship between the
    security of Europe and that of North America.”

  • Dangerous Technology Transfers: President Clinton
    also affirmed the U.S. commitment to work for the
    earliest possible integration of Russia into the
    floundering organization intended to succeed the
    Coordinating Committee on Multilateral Export Controls
    (COCOM) and the Missile Technology Control Regime:
  • “The Presidents agreed that the formal
    participation of the Russian Federation in the
    multilateral nonproliferation export control regimes
    would significantly strengthen those regimes as well
    as broaden the basis for cooperation between the two
    countries on nonproliferation. They agreed to direct
    officials in their respective governments to address
    expeditiously the issues affecting Russian membership
    in the various regimes, with a view to ensuring
    active U.S. support for Russian admission to each of
    the regimes at the earliest possible date.”

    Unfortunately, including Russia and China — two
    of the most prodigious and indiscriminate transferers of
    sensitive dual-use technologies — is a sure-fire way to
    neuter and otherwise obstruct these initiatives.

The Bottom Line

President Clinton has done significant harm to U.S. interests
with his performance in Moscow. It now falls to Congress to try
to undo at least some of this damage. These efforts should
include, among other things: a clear statement of congressional
intent to protect the American people, their forces and allies
overseas against missile attack
; penalties for
countries and companies that defy the U.S. economic embargo on
Iran; and conditionality with respect to aid and other
political and economic assistance to Russia. Such conditionality
should make clear the unacceptability of Moscow proceeding with
the transfer of nuclear weapons-related technology to Iran,
furnishing of other strategic capabilities to dangerous third
parties or prosecuting genocidal attacks against Chechnya — or
others within or near its borders.

– 30 –

(1) See the recent Center for Security
Policy Decision Brief entitled Mischief in Moscow,
Crisis in Washington: Will Clinton Defy Congress on Missile
Defense?
(No. 95-D 30, 8 May 1995).

(2) In addition to Mischief in Moscow,
see the Center for Security Policy Press Release entitled Read
Their Lips: New Hill Leadership Tells Clinton to Stop Foreclosing
Missile Defense Options
(No. 95-P 02,
9 January 1995) and various News Releases by the Coalition
to Defend America: Summit Showdown: Key Legislators, AIPAC
Warn Against Clinton Efforts To Constrain Missile Defenses

(April 12, 1995), Senate Leadership Throws Down the Gauntlet
to Bill Clinton: Defend America — Or Else
(March 15, 1995)
and Congressional Leaders, Others Fire Opening Salvo In 1995
Campaign to Defend America
(January 24, 1995).

Center for Security Policy

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